W I I. M E T .T E L I F E . I'OB S.lLE-VACANT February 14, 1930 lOt FOB SALE-MISC. $57.50 KENJl.\\.ORTH, lot 50x140 feet. WEST. GAS RANGE; LARGE COAL WATER heater. Call janitor, Winnetka 1002. 102LTN!l-ltp HESTDENCE 103 WANTED TO BUY-MISC. I At Woman's Club I "Transition Period in Poetry," Topic of Beale Address C. R. NORMAN & CO. REALTORS 1137 CENTRAL AVE. Ph. Wilmette 3!)GG WANTED TO BUY-CHILD'S ROCKiSLTNZl-llc ing horse. Ph. Winnetka 1474. --------------103LTN21-ltc FOR SALE-- $1,000 WILL BUY l~QCITY in lot in "-est Wilmette, BAW~Al~. WA~TEO - CLEAN, WHITE RAGS, Ph. University 6009. 78LTN2l-ltp lOc per lb. 1232 Central Ave., Wilmette. 103LTN48-tfp 105 MISCELLANEOUS SAI_JE-HALF ACRE ESTATES, rolling, wooded, northwest of Wilmt>ttt>. WILL R E NT TO RESPONSIBLE party, Ladies' and Gentlemen's fancy Fifty minutes to loop, C. & N. W. Ry. dress costumes. Ph. Wilmette 3730. Close to stores, ::;chools, golf course. 105L21-ltc Will arrange financing residence. ·w rite ·wilmette Life A-. 172. 79LTN21-ltc THE HILDREN'S SHOP AT 2000 CENtral Street, North Evanston, specializes lt:t WTD. TO BUY-APT. BUILDINGS in t}:le Famous Tuck Togs and Broh\L\.XTED- BEST 2 APT. BLDG. $15,000 man dresses-also lovely hand-made tn $1 ,000 will buy. Owner only. Allgannents. Phone Greenleaf 0770. drt'ss Life A-162. 95L20-3tp 105LTN21-2tc FOH 96 79 f'OR SALE-ACREAGE I& EST....\TES WANTED TO DUY-HOUSJ.:S Sl'ECIAL ASSESSlUENT NO'fiCE NORTH SHOHE HOl Sl·~ WANTED UE'f'l'E SPECIAL ASSESS~lE~'f \VILL RE INTli;RESTED IN 7 OR 8 WIL1 NO. 284 room modern house between \Yilmettt· and Highland Park. State full details. Address: A. M. I..., 6 N. Michigan Hm lN THE MATTER OF THE SPECIAL 1212, Chicago. 96LT~:h-1t~ ASSESSMENT OF THE VILLAGE OF ~ \VILMETTE, for pt·oceedings to levy a 9tt ANTIQUES . Special Assessment for a local impro\·e- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ment consisting of paving a nd otherwise l-IE1RL00~1S improving parts of Washington Avenue, Highland Avenue, Central Avenue BRING 1!'\ YOUH SILVER HBlHLOOMS Twentieth Street n.nd Twenty-First Street' and have us restore them to their in the Village of \Vilm ette, Cook County: original finish by our silver plating Illinois, Special Assessment No. 264, in process. Guaranteed not to tarnish. the County Court of Cook Cou,nty. NOTICE is hereby given to all p n;ons 1York called for and delivered. PAUL DAVEY interested that the Board of Local 1mJEWELER prov'ments of said Viilage, has hereto165 \\'ilmette Ave. Ph. Wilmette 6 fore filed in said court, in said cause, a !l9LTN19-tfc certificate showing the cost of the improvement, and the amount reserved for YVONNE SOHN rnterest, leaving n.n excess of Twenty NEEDLEPOINT, TAPESTRIES, CHINA, Thousand Nine Hundred Ninetv Dollars glass and pewter. 823 Washington St. and Seventy Ct:"nts ($20,990.70.). to be Evanston. Greenleaf 6592. abated in reduction of said asHessment, 9!lLTN21-ltc and also that said improve!'nent has bee n completed in substantial conformitv to the requirements of the original ordin-ance 100 J.,Olt SALE-HSEHLD. GDS. therefor, and has applied to said court BAR<iA£~-STlCKLE\ ])INIX<; lC\l. to consider and determine whether ot· not :,;et; tahlt>, l.Juft:et, 10 chairs, $50. 'Vin- the facts stated in said certifkate are netka 57i>. · 100LTN21-ltp true, n.nd that said court has fixed Monday, the 24th day of February, A. D. 1930, UPRIGHT 1\L-'\.HUtiA~Y PIA~O. l·, JXE n.t ten o'clock .A. :\I., or as soon theremake, A-1 condition. Yery reasonablt·. after as the business of the court will Ph. Winnetka 20!11. 100LTN21-ltc permit, at. the room of said County Court, 111 the County Building, in the Citv of FOR SALE- MAPLE BEDH.ll :\[ SET (~hicago, in !-;aid Cook County, a:-;· the bedstead-high headboard, mattre<~a: t1me and place for the hearing· on said spr-~ngs, dresRer. commode, table, 2 application. All nersons desiring mav file ch~ir s. Price $50. 30 Lake Ave. Ph. objections in s:1i(l court before said. day Wtlmette 980-.J. 100L21-1tp antl may appeat· on the hearing- and · FOR SALE EN n L I S H HAND mn ke their defense. w~ought irtln and iron:-~, firesl~t. and Dated February 7th, 1930. ratling. 2 large firesi<ll' ('hairs, lamp. EARL E. ORNER Handmade brass chandelier. Ph . t;lt·nEHNEST C. CAZEL. coe 1034. 100LT).l'21-ltc .A LBERT L. GRIN~ELL CYRUS MILES McDONALD TEN PIECE DININU HOOM SET STANTON VAN INWAOEN bargain, will sell separate ly or t!l~ HA~S von REINSPERG gether. Phone· \\'ilmette 60:1. GORDON WILSON 100LTX21-1 ttl Board of Local Improvements of th e Village of 1Vilmette. FOR SALE- WALNUT DINING H00:\1 L20-2tc table and chairs; 2 Simmon's beds ·omplete; dresser; chairs; all yery reason: able. Moving out of town Marl'h 1st. Call 996 Linden Ave., Hubbard Woods. 100LTN21-l tl' - - - - FOR SALE-LARGE CHINESE SUNAnother Northwestern team which room rug, player piano, victrola, larg<' dining rm. set, beautiful mah. bedrm . stacks up as the probable Big 'fen set. Shown lzy appt. Ph. Gr'enleaf 721.~. 1001.21-lt(' champion will open its conference s~a FOR SALE - ;; SIZE M A II. BED, son in a dual meet with Wisconsin at spring and m~ttress exc. quality and the university gym tomorrow. condition, $18; secretary desk, $15; Coach Tom Robinson has three Big dresses, size 38 and 40, cheap. Ph. Wilmette 2091. 100L21-ltc Ten record holders, two of whom h0ld the national intercollegiate records in FOR SALE-BABY GRAND PIANO, $300. their specialties, as the backbone of Alto saxophone, $65. Mah. double bed, his new team. Capt. At Schwartz, freedre~ser, etc. Ph. Kenilworth 742. 100LTN21-1t<' style champion ; Dick Hinch, record holder in the 150-yard backstroke, and Ill WTD. TO BUY-HSEHLD. GOODS Don Petersen, 200-yard breast stroke WANTED TO BUY - SECOND-HAND record holder, are the champion furniture and other household goods ~plashers. Highest prices for same. Crost Furni~ In addition the Purple team has Bob ture store, 1004-6 Emerson St., Evans=ton, Ill. Ph. Univ. 189. 101LTN48-tfc Howlett, sophomore, who can beat Petersen in the breast stroke; Bill FOR SALE-MISC. Itt ' Covode and Bill Wilson, free style. FOR &_ALE-HEN HOUSE 4x5 FT., PEN and Harold Boyer in the back stroke. 10x15 ft., wire top, suitable for chickens, dove, dog, rabbit. Also large EngMr. and Mrs. Craig Ketcham, 631 lish baby carriage. All cheap. Ph. Winnetka 1925. 102LT21-ltc Abbottsford road, Kenilworth left Wednesday, February 12, for a cruise to the FOR SALE--$900 CABLE PLAYER West Indies. They sailed on the Italian plan~heap tor Immediate disposal. liner,' Vulcania, and expect to be gone Call Hollycourt 2934 after 3 p. m. 102LTN21-2tp three or four weeks. Northwestern Tank Team Meets Wisconsin Friday By Rutheda L. Pretzel A goodly company of listeners gath Miss Dorothy Rae, Wilmette sopra- ered to .hear Dr. Charles Hallock no, and R. E. Pattison Kline, promi- Beale's talk Tuesday morning at Comnent .\ Vilmette and Chicago executive, munity House, Winnetka, one of hi s series on "Spiritual Values in Modern appeared on last Wednesday after- English Literature." His subject this noon's program before members of the week was "The Transition Period m Woman's club of Wilmette. Poetry." Following the Classical pe Miss Rae possesses a warm, well riod, with Pope and Dryden as exrounded voice capable of many shades ponents, came the Romantic period. of meaning, and with that velvety with novelists like Scott and Dickens, quality that permits no edges to jut and poets like Tepnyson and Brownout. Her first number ·was Bendbcrg's ing. \Vith the Transition period came dramatic "Hindu Song," which calls a time of disillusion, and, although for a full, sustained tone. A great Matthe\\· Arnold properly belongs to an fund of breath enables Miss Rae to earlier one, he typically voices t~1at handle her phrases easily and grace- teeling of faith. As day and night mark fully. As a contrast, she followed with the season, so exaltation and depre s\Vare's "The Fountain" in which her sion mark the human spirit. "End W(' tone wa · delicate, having the flute-like seck we never shall attain," he cries . clearness so enchantingly descriptive And of him a friend said: "So Matthe\\' of the play of waters. Thomas' lyric, Arnold is dead, ar1d gone to Heaven . "l\femory," a very lovely composition vVelll he'll see God, but he won't like of Baehr's, "Iris," and Rogers' well Him." likl'd "The Titpe for the ~faking of Then Came Whitman Song~ has Come," completed her Into this period of change and di.:-.group. All were given \rith a mus1- illusion came \Valt \Vhitman, breezih· cianl~· manner and a voice that is mel- daring t0 use words and subject ncve.r odious and under perfect control. As before considered as pertaining to an encore she sang Rich's s<.H1g writ- poetry at all. Dr. Beale characterized ten to a part of \\.alter Savage Land- his lists of names as not a part of or's poem "To Ianth e." ~[iss Adelle poetry at all, but likened \Vhitman to ~[. Godden gave ~[iss Rae a nn1. ical an· aeroplane which, as it starts, is background that was artisticallY blend- like an ungainly fowl, but after it ateel to support and enhance !\{ i~s Rae's tains speed and rises into the air bevoice. · comes a beautiful bird. So \Vhitman ~I r . Kline ap)Jropriatcly lectured 011 slowly takes ftre, leaves his catalogue .\braham Lincoln, speaking of him of names, and soars aloft, leads us "inwith rcrercncc and great respect. He to a larger and ampler world," enlarg felt that Lincoln left a message to all ing "our house of lif e." Especially do people, which is applicable to us to- we feel this in \Vhitman's "Captain , day. Then· arc live characteristics of My Captain/' and "Pioneers, oh, Pio LincoltJ that all men and all natillnS neers." He himself pioneered, but was slwuld han-. he said. \\' e need to greatest when he returned to the great understand the Declaration of Inde- highway of traditional poetry, since pendcnce and its spiritual ideal~ as ··~verybody knows more than anybo ~ly, Lincoln understood them, and \\'e need Every age knows more than any age." to belieyc that the Constitution of the Lanier Most Lyric Poet L"nitcd States form~ the best type of Sidney Lanier, poet and musician, gon: rnmcnt the world has knmYn. A poverty-haunted yet confident of hi ~ prooi ot this is fnnnd in the fact that power, Dr. Beale considered our mo st twenty-three other nations have fol- lyric poet. Lanier does not belong to lowed this form of gun:rnment. Like any period of trClnsition, but cannot Lincoln. ~fr. Kline continued. " ·e need be omitted m anv consideration oi a belief in truth, and we also need to American poets. A confederate solstand for obedience to the laws of the dier, weakened hy his war cxpericnc('. country. The la st characteristic is the a teacher in Johns Hopkins univ ersitY quality 0f tolerance that Lincoln had for a short period, flutist in the Bart;and a love for people tha't we shonlti more Symphony orchestra, his , ·ersc have today. Mr. Kline felt that Lin- was deeply poetic and musical. Seleccoln was the saviour of the nation. and tions from "Sunrise," one of the three 11 that he is the most pathetic, the most poems ?f "The Marshes of Glynn, il1explicablc, the most heauti fnl, and were gtven hy Dr. Beale-"Oh. like the mo st majestic figure the American to the greatness of God is the greatnation has produced. He rravc a brief ness within the range of the marshes, and heartfelt survev of Lincoln's life the liberal marshes of Glynn." Other speaking of his ideals and spiritttaJ poems quoted were "The Master" and principles. "Crystal." The last lecture of Dr. Beale will be given Tuesday and will be open to all. His subject will be "The Moderns." . · I N· U. PI . ays Retum Game Wtth Badgers Saturday Northwestern's cagers, only conqueror~ of the s~ron.g. Wisconsin quintet thts season, wtll v1s1t the Badgers' floor for a return engagement Saturday evening, and then will come home for a game with Minnesota Monday night at the university gymnasium. In the first conference game of the season Purple beat Wisconsin, 23 to 14. in what, as one looks back on it, was much of an uoset. Since then Wisconsin has come through without a score against it, while Northwestern's quintet has lost three games and · won two. Last night the Purple was to play Indiana. The showing last Monday when Illi· b h p 1 nots eat t e urp e, 30 to 24, indicated that Coach Lonborg has h k' . yet to find a smoot -wor ang combmation. Bergberm, Riel. and McCarnes are the only men certam to start Saturday's game· the choice between Walter, Mundy' Lockhart and Whelan for the othe; posts being problematical. Call N. S. Taxpayers to Mass Meeting Next Tuesday (C ontlllued from page 1) -that loc.al taxpayers may expect an in ~ C! ease 111 assessed valuations that will range. from 100 to 125 percent, the commJttee states. While the actual rate of taxation wilt be governed by the. tax lev!es filed by the local governtng boches, the committee is now of the opinion that many other districts are being assessed on a much lower basis and has acertained that many errors have been made in the \·a1uations on property. The program for the meeting Tues(.lav. night has been carefully planned, 1t IS ann~unced, and will mave quickly tl~ the .Pomt where some definite course Care 01 act 10 n can be decided upon. h~s been taken to provide an assembhng place that will house all who co~e and the committee urges that all tt>s1dents be present. ... · - · -